Another new union organized in Coca-Cola Pakistan, this time in Faislabad

15 08 2010

Just two weeks after the victory in Coca-Cola Multan, workers at Coca-Cola Pakistan’s Faislabad plant had cause to celebrate yet again today, as their union was officially registered.

The union, formed at the beginning of June, was organised with the support of the IUF-affiliated National Federation of Food, Beverage & Tobacco Workers (FFBTW). This marks another major breakthrough for Coca-Cola workers in
Pakistan.

Efforts to organize a union at Coca-Cola Faislabad in 2002 met with severe repression and subsequently the union ceased top exist. Eight years later the workers at the Faislabad bottling plant fought back, organizing a democratic union with the assistance of the Coca-Cola Karachi union and the newly formed union at Gujranwala.

Now five Coca-Cola unions are members of the IUF-affiliated FFBTW: the Coca-Cola Beverages Staff and Workers’ Union, Karachi; the Coca Cola Beverages Employees’ Union, Rahim Yar Khan; the People’s Employees’ Union Coca-Cola Beverages Pakistan (CCBPL) Ltd Multan; the CCBPL Gujranwala Workers’ Union and the Coca-Cola Beverages Employees Union, Faisalabad.

The elected officers of the Coca-Cola Beverages Employees Union Faisalabad are: Muhammad Farooq, Chairperson; Amanat Ali, President; Muhammad Akram, Vice-President; Muhammad Israr, General Secretary; Riaz
Ahmed Siddiqui, Joint Secretary; Abdul Hameed, Information Secretary; and Shahzad Hussain as Treasurer.





Australia appears before UN over human rights

15 08 2010

By London correspondent Rachael Brown

Posted Wed Aug 11, 2010 9:12am AEST

United Nations flag flying outside Geneva UN headquarters

The UN panel is investigating whether the Australian Government has singled out Aborigines and asylum seekers with racist policies. (Reuters: Denis Balibouse)

Australia has appeared before a United Nations panel in Geneva, accused of human rights violations against Aboriginal people and asylum seekers.

The UN panel is investigating whether the Australian Government has singled out Aborigines and asylum seekers with racist policies.

The panel has suggested Australia consider a treaty with its Indigenous people.

Three years into the intervention program in the Northern Territory, the panel is concerned some discriminatory policies remain and that there is a lack of Indigenous inclusion in local decision making.

The Australian Government was also pressed on its decision to suspend new immigration claims from Sri Lankan and Afghan asylum seekers.

The Government will present its reply overnight.

ABC News





Workers, unions and stopping Abbott

15 08 2010

Tim Gooden

For many union leaders afraid of a Coalition victory on August 21, campaigning against Tony Abbott simply means campaigning for Julia Gillard.

With a conservative win on the cards unions have escalated their pro-ALP campaigning. The Australian Manufacturing Workers Union — which has filled Labor’s coffers with more than $340,000 – has also enlisted its officials for ringarounds in marginal seats.

The Australian Council of Trade Unions has levied affiliates $1 per member, raising a further $1.8 million for electoral advertising. After three weeks of campaigning it had spent $2.13 million on metropolitan TV and radio ads, with the Australian Nursing Federation adding $475,000 of its own.

ACTU nonsense about Labor

Workers have every reason to be concerned about a Coalition victory: a triumphant Abbott would doubtless try to reintroduce aspects of Work Choices.

But does this mean that to defend workers’ rights the Rudd-Gillard record must be glossed over? Can unions campaign effectively against Abbott without being straight about Labor’s Fair Work Act?

Unfortunately, in their desperation to build support for Labor, the majority of unions are being dishonest about its industrial relations record.

For example, the ACTU executive’s pre-election resolution lists “protection from unfair dismissal for all workers” as a gain under Labor. But most workers in small businesses for less than a year have no right to appeal against unfair dismissal.

Another supposed gain is protection of delegates who exercise their workplace rights. But any union official who leaves the office desk knows union activists are regularly targeted and sacked, with successful reinstatement a rarity.

Many hail the FWA as a return to collective bargaining. While some FWA provisions do force the boss to negotiate, this law also gives the bloody-minded employer intent on frustrating bargaining an arsenal of weapons, with no obligation to reach an agreement.

By contrast, the right to strike remains one of the most restricted in any developed country and violates International Labor Organisation standards.

This makeover of the FWA has taken place even though workplace minister Simon Crean told the ACTU executive that there would be no “second tranche” of workplace reforms if Labor wins. It would also reintroduce legislation — blocked by the Coalition in the Senate — to replace the Australian Building and Construction Commission with a similar body with “coercive powers”!

Labor’s only carrot for the unions is its “Fair Entitlements Guarantee”, covering workers in businesses that go broke. This revamped version of the Coalition’s scheme significantly increases the guarantee to four weeks of redundancy pay per year of work. A welcome reform, even if it comes too late for the tens of thousands hurt by the Global Financial Crisis.

It’s no surprise then that a number of unions have broken ranks with the ACTU line. The Victorian branch of the Electrical Trades Union, which disaffiliated from the ALP earlier this year, is backing the Greens, as is the Victorian United Firefighters Union.

The Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union is calling for a Green vote in the Senate, citing the ABCC and the charges against shop steward Ark Tribe. But the CFMEU has also contributed funds to the ALP campaign and is backing Labor candidates in the House of Representatives.

The Melbourne test

The dodgy argument that the unions need to support the ALP to keep the Coalition out of government is most plausible in marginal seats where the contest is between Labor and Coalition. It loses all punch in ALP-Green marginals such Melbourne, where Greens candidate Adam Bandt came within 4.7% of winning in 2007.

Bandt, a former lawyer well-known for his work defending workers and unions, is standing again, facing ex-ACTU official Cath Bowtell.

Reflecting the polarisation within the unions, the Victorian Trades Hall Council’s August meeting hosted presentations from Bandt and Bowtell. In discussion Victorian ETU secretary Dean Mighell asked the ALP candidate if she would be prepared to break Labor caucus discipline and speak publicly on issues of concern to unions.

Bowtell said she would make a judgment about “the most effective way to achieve reform…sometimes you will get reform working quietly and sometimes speaking publicly.” Bandt commented that “the ALP caucus is where progressive voices go to be silenced.”

Despite the Greens’ record in moving for the full abolition of Work Choices and the ABCC, some unions have gone into overdrive to support Bowtell. The ACTU has also approached affiliates seeking access to their membership data to allow a “cold-calling” campaign.

The Liquor, Hospitality and Miscellaneous Workers Union, Community and Public Sector Union and Australian Services Union have donated funds, staff time and office space. Left-wing unions such as the Maritime Union of Australia and AMWU are also reported to be assisting.

Responding to an ACTU request for membership data, Dean Mighell told the August 3 Australian: “I just question the judgment of the ACTU on a whole range of matters, given the Greens policy on industrial relations is far more favourable to Australian workers than the ALP’s, yet the ACTU issues a call to arms to support that party.”

On August 10, Crikey.com reported that CFMEU national president Dave Noonan said “a Bandt victory in Melbourne was a ‘zero sum game’ in terms of worker rights because it did nothing to keep Tony Abbott out of power”.

This argument is nonsense. A Greens victory in Melbourne wouldn’t deliver government to Abbott, but it /would /deliver an MP able to speak out against the ABCC, which all unions say they oppose.

Defeating Abbott, strengthening labour

Urging workers to put Abbott last would have been part of any serious union campaign at this election. But glossing over the reality of Labor in government only helps breed cynicism, confusion and disengagement. It is this mood that periodically delivers Coalition governments and allows Labor to get away with its own anti-worker policies when the political cycle turns.

By contrast, if the Greens win the Senate balance of power at this poll a returned Labor government will have to publicly bloc with the Coalition to keep anti-worker laws in place.

Unions have a duty to be honest with members and credit them with enough intelligence to vote against anti-worker policies without voting for the Coalition. When workers fully understand Labor’s failure to deliver, they are hardly likely to vote for more punishment under Abbott.

They will look for other parties to support, those — like socialists and Greens — that really do defend our rights at work.

Socialist Alliancce member Tim Gooden is Geeelong Trades Hall Council secretary. Written in a personal capacity





Socialist Alliance 2010 election launch. End Mandatory Detention – kids and refugees out of prison

15 08 2010

Socialist Alliance launch their campaign for the Federal seat of Gellibrand at Maribyrnong Detention Centre with candidate Ben Courtice and Senate candidate Margarita Windisch. In response to the scapegoating by the two major parties the Alliance argues that refugees and asylum seekers are not to blame for their circumstances.

The candidates that the Socialist Alliance is fielding in the coming federal election are just a small selection of the committed socialist activists urgently needed to build a new social movement for real change. There are many more such people out there – people who are already helping transform the unjust and unsustainable society we now are forced to live in – and only some of them are in the Socialist Alliance. We are working to unite all the social activists who are critical to mobilising the people’s power that is required to wrest society away from the corporate rich.

We will direct our our first preferences to the Greens as a general rule and, though we don’t think that the Labor party is much better, we will preference Labor ahead of the Liberal-National Coalition and other right-wing parties.





UK National Shop Stewards Network conference 2010

15 08 2010
TheSocialistParty | July 03, 2010

#1 of #10 videos – The fourth national conference of the National Shop Stewards Network (NSSN), backed by four major trade unions, initiated to build solidarity and support among rank and file trade union activists four years ago, met on 26 June 2010, just days after chancellor George Osborne’s ‘bloodbath budget’, to make plans to oppose the worst threatened cuts in 80 years.

Starring UK Firies’ Secretary Matt Wrack.





Belfast Pride 2010

15 08 2010
TradeUnionTVIreland | August 04, 2010

Thousands marched through the streets of Belfast in support of LGBTQ rights. The Trade Union movement along with many other workplaces solidly turned out to demonstrate their commitment to fight for equality in the workplace.

Usdaw, Unite, Unison, Nipsa, Irish Congress of Trades Unions, PCS, Royal College of Nursing, Queens University Belfast, the SDLP, Sinn Féin, Socialist Workers party, Socialist Party, The Greens, The Humanist Society, a Eurovision fan club, drag queens, has beens, fighters, friends, mums dads, brothers, sisters, neighbours, pastors, priests and reverends all stood together for an alternative Ulster showing thatthere is a will and there is a way.

The bigots were there but clearly irrelevant, the swish family Robinson a painful reminder of how quickly the powerful can disappear.

Belfast Pride was a tremendous event and for anyone who remembers more repressive times a wonderful marker of hope that society has indeed changed and was worth fighting for. As people said in the piece there’s a good way to go in the fight for full equality.

(c) Paula Geraghty 2010





Tolpuddle Martyrs Commemoration 2010 (July 18, 2010)

15 08 2010
RMTtelevision | July 22, 2010

RMT at the annual Tolpuddle Martyrs commemoration in Dorset. The event celebrates the six farm labourers who were deported to Australia in 1834 for forming a trade union.





Tony Abbott will take us backwards

15 08 2010
AEUFederal | July 27, 2010

Wrong way Tony! An ad about Mr Abbott’s plan to cut $3 billion in education.
The Australian Education Union believes all parties should be committed to investing more, not less in public education.





QNU/ANF federal election 2010 TV ad 1

15 08 2010

The ANF and the QNU have launched a series of television commercials to appear in the lead-up to the federal election.

We want to inform the Australian public of the commitments made by the two major parties toward the funding of nurses and midwives and our health system.

Our TV commercials also very importantly highlight to the pubic the ongoing desperate shortage of nurses and midwives.

We need to ensure that nursing and midwifery is at the forefront of the health policy debate in this country. That’s why we are asking people to vote for more nurses through our television advertising campaign.





QNU/ANF federal election 2010 TV ad 2

15 08 2010

The ANF and the QNU have launched a series of television commercials to appear in the lead-up to the federal election.

We want to inform the Australian public of the commitments made by the two major parties toward the funding of nurses and midwives and our health system.

Our TV commercials also very importantly highlight to the pubic the ongoing desperate shortage of nurses and midwives.

We need to ensure that nursing and midwifery is at the forefront of the health policy debate in this country. That’s why we are asking people to vote for more nurses through our television advertising campaign.








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